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Sep 26, 2024 at 20:06 comment added user71659 See how Chinese characters are presented hierarchically on zhongwen.com.
Sep 26, 2024 at 19:18 comment added corvus_192 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_character_orders
Sep 26, 2024 at 14:14 comment added user1937198 So rather than a single reference page of ideograms, it might be worth considering something like a modal popup containing the information about that ideogram that you can access when looking at words.
Sep 26, 2024 at 14:12 comment added user1937198 You might want to take a broader picture. Rather than asking how to make such a page useful, consider if a page is useful for ideographic languages. In an alphabet the expectation is you learn the letters, and then you learn how to spell the words with them. But you mostly know the alphabet. In an ideographic language, learning the ideograms is part of the process of learning the words. Its likely that your users expect to be constantly presented with new ones.
Sep 26, 2024 at 10:46 history became hot network question
Sep 26, 2024 at 8:37 comment added Antares Sidenote on usefulness: I'd suggest making the tap on a phonem playing the audiofile and a long press showing the details. This way you could enhance learning by also listening and associating. Maybe even click several phonems together in an input field and then have the meaning displayed if it is a valid word from a dictionary (and also with audio playback feature)
Sep 26, 2024 at 8:32 comment added Antares Sidenote on first screenshot: UI/UX recommendation, if you present text in size 6pt and also lightgrey on white, you're making users a hard time discerning them. Consider a black color and larger font to make it useful at a glance without the need to zoom in.
Sep 26, 2024 at 8:28 answer added Antares timeline score: 3
Sep 26, 2024 at 6:35 vote accept Lance Pollard
Sep 26, 2024 at 6:36
Sep 26, 2024 at 4:51 answer added Danielillo timeline score: 5
Sep 26, 2024 at 2:42 history asked Lance Pollard CC BY-SA 4.0